abstract: Wildfire is an inescapable feature of Canadian landscapes, burning an average of over two million hectares annually and causing significant repercussions for communities, infrastructure, and resources. Because fire is managed provincially, each jurisdiction has developed a distinctive approach to preparing for, responding to, and recovering from fire on its landscapes. Using a comparative study between seven provinces and four national agencies, this dissertation examines differences in institutional design and policy with respect to the knowledge management systems required to respond to wildfire: How do policies and procedures vary between jurisdictions, how do they affect the practices of each fire management agency, and how ca...
For nine decades, the central tenet of American wildfire policy was to protect natural resources and...
Fire hazards in the rural-urban fringe have been a cause of concern for several decades. During the ...
Wildfire presents a challenge to natural resource managers the world over, and the intentional setti...
Fire is a natural ecological process in the boreal forest, but also a threat to human lives, propert...
The problems of fire in areas where forest and infrastructure meet (the wildland urban interface) ar...
As occurrences of wildland-urban interface (WUI) wildfires become more frequent throughout Ontario,...
With the continued increase in wildfire incidents, the last few decades in Canada have seen increase...
Wildfires are becoming more frequent and intense in Canada’s boreal forest region. Research shows th...
Fire, people, and landscapes have dynamically coexisted through time in fire-dependent social-ecolog...
Homeowners and communities in the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) are strongly encouraged to protect ...
Much research on property owner participation in wildfire mitigation activities has been done in the...
Wildland urban interface (WUI) communities are generally the most at risk of being impacted by wildf...
Our aim was to study post-fire perceptions of selected mitigation strategies for wildland fire-induc...
Record blazes swept across parts of the US in 2015, burning more than 10 million acres. The four big...
Across the globe, settler nation-states are being forced to contend with the large-scale ecological ...
For nine decades, the central tenet of American wildfire policy was to protect natural resources and...
Fire hazards in the rural-urban fringe have been a cause of concern for several decades. During the ...
Wildfire presents a challenge to natural resource managers the world over, and the intentional setti...
Fire is a natural ecological process in the boreal forest, but also a threat to human lives, propert...
The problems of fire in areas where forest and infrastructure meet (the wildland urban interface) ar...
As occurrences of wildland-urban interface (WUI) wildfires become more frequent throughout Ontario,...
With the continued increase in wildfire incidents, the last few decades in Canada have seen increase...
Wildfires are becoming more frequent and intense in Canada’s boreal forest region. Research shows th...
Fire, people, and landscapes have dynamically coexisted through time in fire-dependent social-ecolog...
Homeowners and communities in the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) are strongly encouraged to protect ...
Much research on property owner participation in wildfire mitigation activities has been done in the...
Wildland urban interface (WUI) communities are generally the most at risk of being impacted by wildf...
Our aim was to study post-fire perceptions of selected mitigation strategies for wildland fire-induc...
Record blazes swept across parts of the US in 2015, burning more than 10 million acres. The four big...
Across the globe, settler nation-states are being forced to contend with the large-scale ecological ...
For nine decades, the central tenet of American wildfire policy was to protect natural resources and...
Fire hazards in the rural-urban fringe have been a cause of concern for several decades. During the ...
Wildfire presents a challenge to natural resource managers the world over, and the intentional setti...